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Professor Anne Kelley Provides a Perspective on Second Order Nonlinear Spectroscopies

February 21, 2020

In a perspective in the Journal of Chemical Physics, Professor Anne Kelley describes how “surface” and “bulk” contributions to the sum frequency or the second harmonic signal should be distinguishable through their angular dependence in a scattering geometry. It also explores possible mechanisms whereby second order spectroscopies might provide access to surface states that are very weak or absent in other forms of optical spectroscopy.